Municipal board adjourns boundary hearing after three days of testimony

A battle between a resident and Centre Well­ing­ton council over council rep­re­sentation allotted to Fergus took three days last week – with no decision.
Keith Fairfield has argued since about 2000 that Fergus is under-represented because the wards in his town have more people than other township wards. His prime example is Wards 3 and 4 in Fergus, which have 5,276 and 3,973 people respectively, compared to Ward 2, Elora, parts of Nichol and Pilkington town­ships, which had 1,544.
Fairfield came to council sev­eral times since 2000 in an attempt to get some changes, but until this year, council has opted for the status quo. When the council in 2005 said there would be no changes, Fairfield collected over 250 signatures on a petition and applied for a muni­cipal board hearing.
Several councillors have been bitter over Fairfield’s persistence because it has cost the township a great deal of mon­ey, and very few people have indicated interest in chang­es by attending public meetings. The 2005 meeting had three people in attendance. At the latest public meeting this year, two members of the public and a handful of former politicians attended.
When a new council con­sidered what Fairfield was ad­vo­cating, it decided this year to make changes on its own. It came up with its own proposal for change. That system brings six wards closer in popu­lation, and also took into ac­count growth projections for the next decade.
Fairfield had proposed  to council his own idea of an ideal ward system –  four wards, designated with letters. How­ever, when the OMB hearing was held, he presented an en­tirely new proposal. It consisted of three representatives on council from Fergus, and three more from the townships.
The township’s proposed new boun­daries are:
– Ward 1, 3,948 population, north of the river, would be bounded by the river, Gerrie Road, the Woolwich Township boundary line, and County Road 17;
– Ward 2, south of the river, population 1,719, would be bound by Woolwich town line, Sideroad 6 North (instead of County Road 7), with a small corner at the northwest side of ward 4, close to the Grand River and the ward 2 boundary, in­cluded in ward 2;
– Ward 3, north of the river, would shrink in area, with a population of 3,859, and the boundary would be County Road 17, Gerrie Road, the riv­er, and Highway 6 except for a small portion near the river that would reach to Garafraxa Street and go north to Forfar Street;
– Ward 4, 3,801, would also shrink so its boundaries are Nichol Road 22, Sideroad 6 North, the river, and Jones Baseline and Scotland Street;
– Ward 5, north of the river would have 4,126 people, and have Highway 6 as its western boundary, the river, East and West Garafraxa Townline, and Sideroad 26 of West Garafraxa as its boundaries; and
Ward 6, with 2,602 people, and boundaries that including the River, East and West Gara­fraxa Townline, a portion of the Erin and Eramosa Townline, County Road 22, and Jones baseline and Scotland Street.
“It was a challenging ex­peri­ence – a trying experience,” Fairfield said of his time at the hearing.
He said his proposals were in line with a supreme court decision that stated that equal representation is the most im­portant factor in effective rep­resentation.
Former councils argu­ed they were providing effective representa­tion, so there was no need to change the wards.
Fairfield said his plan is to give half of the people in Centre Wellington half the representation. “That’s equal rep­resentation, isn’t it? I think that’s something the people can understand.”
He added, “The Township of Centre Wellington opposed that. The mayor opposed it bit­terly.”
Fairfield said he was frus­trated because the hearing could only change the ward boundaries. Because of the way it works, the board was not permitted to make changes to the number of councillors, and only council had the right to do that – prior to the hearing. He said that was why he dropped his proposal for wards using a letter instead of a number, and his proposal to change the number of wards.
“I couldn’t take that to the OMB because the OMB could­n’t do it,” he said. “So, I took what I did to the OMB.”
All of the Centre Well­ington councils over the past seven years had, until this year, argu­ed the status quo was working well.
Ross-Zuj said in an inter­view that with several new coun­cillors and she herself returning to local government after a term away, council de­cided to take a fresh look at the boundaries and came up with what it believed to be a fair solution. She said council looked at many possibilities be­fore opting for the ward changes.
Ross-Zuj also noted Fair­field did not bother to attend the public meeting council set to hear comment on the pro­pos­ed ward changes, and council was forced to noti­fy all 252 people who had signed Fair­field’s petition.
Ross-Zuj was not particu­­larly happy to find at the OMB hearing that Fairfield was pre­senting a completely new pro­posal.
When she testified, she noted that the Kitchen-Arm­strong report that restructured Wellington County, deliberate­ly ensured all the wards in Centre Wellington would have an urban and rural mix, to provide diversity.
“Unity is strength,” Ross-Zuj said of that strategy, citing the township’s motto.
“It brought us together – urban and rural – community of interests.”
Ross-Zuj of council’s con­sid­­er­ing the ward system, “At no time did anyone have an ap­petite for representation by popu­lation only.”
She even cited at the hear­ing the exercise between Fer­gus and Elora of ‘burying the hatchet,” something the long­time rivals actually did twice over the years. She said OMB vice chairman Jyoti Zuidema “found that amusing.”
She added, “To have three councillors from one area – that old hatchet is shaking in the ground.”
She said that if Fairfield wants to deal with issues based only on numbers, it took three days for the hearing with “sub­stantial cost to tying up staff, the planner, lawyer, and my­self. The taxpayer has a sub­stantial bill for an issue with no public interest.”
She noted only three citizens, including Fairfield, attended the OMB hearing.
The results will not be available for several weeks.

 

 

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